For an Ontario incorporated business owner, disability or a serious illness is often more financially damaging than death. At death, life insurance pays, the estate settles, and the business transitions on a defined timeline. With disability, the situation is open-ended.
You may still own shares in the Ontario corporation. You may still have contractual obligations to partners. The business may continue to deteriorate without your contribution while you remain legally and financially connected to it. If there is no funded disability buy-out, no income replacement designed around your Ontario corporate structure, and no critical illness coverage, the consequences compound over months and years.
At Eagle Wealth Partners, disability and critical illness planning is not treated as a standalone product. It is designed as part of the estate and succession plan — integrated with the buy-sell agreement, the corporate structure, and the overall liquidity strategy for the Ontario incorporated business.
Death triggers a clear sequence of events in Ontario. Disability does not. An owner may be absent for months or years with no resolution, no clean transition, and no timeline against which the Ontario business or partners can plan responsibly.
A disabled Ontario business owner may continue drawing corporate income while no longer generating the revenue that funds it. For the corporation and for the surviving partners, this creates immediate financial pressure with no obvious exit and no defined endpoint.
Ontario businesses built around the expertise and relationships of one person face immediate continuity risk when that person is absent. Clients become uncertain. Employees lose direction. Revenue deteriorates faster than most owners anticipate.
Most Ontario shareholder agreements address death thoroughly. Disability provisions are often vague, triggering conditions are disputed, and the funded buy-out mechanism does not exist. A disabled Ontario partner with no funded exit is a problem that does not resolve itself.
A conversation about your current Ontario income structure, existing coverage, business continuity exposure, and partnership situation. No forms, no product discussion. This is about understanding the gap before designing the solution.
We review existing personal and corporate disability and critical illness policies, the Ontario corporate income structure, and the shareholder agreement to identify specific coverage gaps and structural misalignments.
We model the financial impact of a disability or critical illness on the Ontario business, the partnership, and the owner's personal income — and quantify the gap between current coverage and the actual exposure.
We design the coverage structure — income replacement, CI lump-sum, disability buy-out, business overhead — and compare solutions across eight major Canadian carriers through Hub Financial as an independent broker.
We integrate the disability and critical illness coverage with the broader Ontario estate and succession plan, coordinate with your corporate lawyer on shareholder agreement alignment, and establish a regular review cadence.
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At minimum annually. Additionally, when significant changes occur — business value jumps, new corporations or HoldCos are added, family changes occur, or when Ontario tax rules change affecting private corporations. Disability coverage specifically should be reviewed when income structures change or when corporate restructuring affects how income flows from the business.
Read full answer →We work alongside them. Your Ontario accountant handles tax compliance and technical calculations. Your lawyer handles legal structures, shareholder agreements, wills, and trusts. Eagle Wealth Partners focuses on exposure mapping, continuity strategy, and insurance design — integrated with the work your existing advisors are already doing.
Read full answer →We work best with Ontario incorporated owners where the combined exposure — estate tax, business continuity risk, and disability gap — creates a meaningful planning opportunity. If you are unsure whether your situation qualifies, the 3-minute Quick Scan is the right starting point with no obligation.
Read full answer →Book a complimentary 30-minute discovery call. You will leave with a clear picture of your exposure and whether a deeper engagement makes sense. No obligation. No sales pitch. Whether we work together or not, you leave with clarity.
Disclaimer: Disability and critical illness coverage suitability depends on individual health, income, and Ontario corporate structure. All planning is implemented in coordination with qualified legal and tax professionals.
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